Agar Wynne

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Prime MinisterJoseph Cook
Preceded byCharlie Frazer
Succeeded byWilliam Spence
Preceded byGeorge Turner
Agar Wynne
Postmaster-General of Australia
In office
24 June 1913  17 September 1914
Prime MinisterJoseph Cook
Preceded byCharlie Frazer
Succeeded byWilliam Spence
Member of the Australian Parliament
for Balaclava
In office
12 December 1906  30 July 1914
Preceded byGeorge Turner
Succeeded byWilliam Watt
Personal details
Born(1850-07-15)15 July 1850
London, England
Died12 May 1934(1934-05-12) (aged 83)
PartyInd Protectionist (1906–09)
Liberal (1909–14)
Spouses
Mary Jane Robertson
(m. 18861889)
Annie Dudgeon
(m. 1896)
Alma materUniversity of Melbourne
OccupationAttorney

Agar Wynne (15 July 1850  12 May 1934) was an Australian lawyer and politician. He began his career in the Victorian Legislative Council and served two terms as Solicitor-General of Victoria. In 1906, he transferred to the federal House of Representatives. He was Postmaster-General of Australia in the Cook Government from 1913 to 1914, but retired from federal politics at the 1914 election. He re-entered Victorian politics and briefly served as Attorney-General of Victoria (1917–1918).

Wynne was born in London, but his family emigrated to Australia when he was a child. He educated at Melbourne Church of England Grammar School and enrolled in an articled clerk's course at the University of Melbourne and was admitted as an attorney in July 1874. He married Mary Jane Robertson, née Smith, a widow with two children in November 1886. She died in 1889 and in February 1896 he married Annie Dudgeon, née Samuel, a widow with three children.[1]

Colonial politics

In 1888, Wynne won the seat of Western Province in the Victorian Legislative Council which he held until 1903 and was Postmaster-General and Solicitor-General from 1893 to 1894 in Sir James Patterson's government and Solicitor-General from 1900 to 1902 in Sir George Turner's and Sir Alexander Peacock's governments.[1][2]

Federal politics

Wynne won the seat of Balaclava at the 1906 elections in the Australian House of Representatives as an Independent Protectionist. He joined the Fusion government and served as Postmaster-General in the Cook Ministry from June 1913 to its fall in September 1914, but he did not contest the 1914 elections, apparently because he could not reorganise his department to run on efficient business principles.[1]

State politics and later life

Wynne in 1925

Wynne returned to Victorian politics in 1917, winning the state seat of St Kilda and was Attorney-General, Solicitor-General, Minister of Railways and a Vice-President of the Board of Land and Works from November 1917 to March 1918 in Sir John Bowser's government.[2] He did not stand for re-election in 1920.[1]

Personal life

References

Sources

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